September 2019 Archive
8011.
Automated UI testing service that uses AI to generate tests for you (qanairy.com)
8012.
Using LSTMs to Model the Java Programming Language (arxiv.org)
8013.
Microsoft releases Wunderlist replacement called To Do (microsoft.com)
8014.
React Native vs. Flutter vs. Android vs. iOS, on Stack Overflow (sotagtrends.com)
8015.
'A way of life clobbered overnight: Britain's industrial landscape in the 80s (theguardian.com)
8016.
I built a physical Spotify progress bar (seattlelofts.design)
8017.
Red Hat Quay 3.1, a highly available Kubernetes container registry, arrives (zdnet.com)
8018.
Transformer in 5 Minutes (blue-season.github.io)
8019.
Patch-Gapping Google Chrome (blog.exodusintel.com)
8020.
Run your first application on Kubernetes (medium.com)
8021.
John Bercow to Stand Down as House of Commons Speaker (twitter.com)
8022.
I Finally Wrote a Sudoku Solving Algorithm (dev.to)
8023.
Deploying Phoenix to Kubernetes from Scratch (quan.io)
8024.
Ambients – Peer-to-Peer Programs and Data (ipfs.io)
8025.
Thomas Piketty's new magnum opus published on Thursday (theguardian.com)
8026.
Juul 'ignored law' in US e-cigarette adverts (bbc.com)
8027.
Google Web Server (en.wikipedia.org)
8028.
Prime Sieve of Eratosthenes in Haskell/C (github.com)
8029.
State of the Art Protection in Chrome Web Store (palant.de)
8030.
What can you get for less then $1? 23B database ops (docs.keydb.dev)
8031.
Period Tracker Apps Used by Millions of Women Are Sharing Sensitive Data with FB (buzzfeednews.com)
8032.
New salt-based propellant proven compatible in dual-mode rocket engines (techxplore.com)
8033.
One in 3,652 people born in the UK between 1938 and 1967 show extreme inbreeding (nature.com)
8034.
MLIR: Accelerating AI with open-source infrastructure (blog.google)
8035.
You can't keep your parent's skull (theatlantic.com)
8036.
Upcycling cisco switches into cocktail machines (beastiebytes.com)
8037.
Assessing the Quality of Long-Form Synthesized Speech (ai.googleblog.com)
8038.
We’re thinking about Hooks incorrectly (codethrasher.com)
8039.
Bullwinkle Taught Kids Sophisticated Political Satire (smithsonianmag.com)
8040.
Algorithms should have made courts more fair. What went wrong? (arstechnica.com)